"I'm not sure she believes Jon is capable of running Winterfell and the North," Turner told fans at the panel. "I think she thinks he doesn't have the intellect, the knowledge, the experience that she has. And I concur."

In the season finale, we left the Starks just as their allies declared Jon the new King in the North. As they cheered for him, the camera cut to Sansa. Though at first she seemed pleased for Jon, one glance at Littlefinger skulking in the shadows was all it took for the smile to be wiped from Sansa's face.

Fans speculated she was considering Littlefinger's advice that the "true born daughter of Ned and Catelyn [Stark]" should rule Winterfell rather than "a motherless bastard born in the south."

Her character may also be feeling burned after last season's so-called "Battle of the Bastards," where Jon stripped Ramsay Bolton of his place at Winterfell. When Sansa sat at the war council while they plotted the impending battle, no one asked her opinion despite her understanding Ramsay better than anyone.

And still, Sansa gets shafted at the war council. Helen Sloan/HBO Later, she saved House Stark's hodge-podge army by recruiting the Knights of the Vale to fight at their side. Sure, she conveniently didn't tell Jon about Littlefinger or his army, but they did end up saving the day and turning the tide of the battle when it looked like all was lost.

Seeing Jon — who we learned in the finale is not actually a Stark, but rather Ned's newphew — sitting at the helm of her house is sure to make Sansa at least a little jealous. And according to Turner, Sansa is also more qualified to be queen.

The North knows no king but the King of the North. HBO

"I think she believed it was probably more of a joint effort, in terms of Battle of the Bastards, and she feels that they should both be King and Queen of the North, for sure," Turner argued at Comic-Con. "I don't know about the Iron Throne. I'm not sure she's so keen on that."

The actress conceded that Jon at least has their best interests at heart.

"She knows that he has wonderful morals — that kind of, those Stark morals — and that inevitably, he'll make the right decisions or the good descisions," Turner said. "But whether it's going to benefit anyone is another story. Whatever, Jon, pfft."

HBO

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